Pingtang Miao
Pingtang Miao | |
---|---|
Native to | China |
Region | Guizhou |
Native speakers | 24,000 (1995)[1] |
Hmong–Mien
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
None (mis ) |
Linguist list |
ping Pingtang |
dush Dushan | |
lupi Luodian–Pingyan | |
wanl Wangmo–Luodian | |
Glottolog | None |
Pingtang Miao, named after Pingtang County (平塘 pÃngtáng) in which it is spoken, is a group of Miao languages of China.
Classification
The four varieties of Pingtang were listed as unclassified branches of Chuanqiandian Miao (Western Hmongic) in Wang (1983).[2] Li (2000) classified them together as one of eight branches of Western Hmongic,[3] a position maintained in Wu and Yang (2010).[4]
Varieties
There are four varieties of Pingtang according to Li (2000):
- North (Strecker's Pingtang Miao), 11,000 speakers
- East (Strecker's Dushan Miao), 4,000
- South (Strecker's Luodian–Pingyan Miao), 6,000
- West (Strecker's Wangmo–Luodian Miao AKA Mhang), 3,000
These are at approximately the distance of the varieties of the other branches of West Hmongic, which Ethnologue assigned separate ISO codes.
References
- ↑ 王辅世ã€æ¯›å®—æ¦ï¼Œã€Šè‹—瑶è¯å¤éŸ³æž„拟》,ä¸å›½ç¤¾ä¼šç§‘å¦å‡ºç‰ˆç¤¾ï¼Œ1995年。
- ↑ Wang Fushi (1983). "MiáoyÇ” fÄngyán huà fÄ“n wèntà (On the Dialect Divisions of the Miao Language)". MÃnzú YÇ”wén 5:1–22.
- ↑ æŽäº‘兵,《苗è¯æ–¹è¨€åˆ’分é—ç•™é—®é¢˜ç ”ç©¶ã€‹ï¼Œä¸å¤®æ°‘æ—大å¦å‡ºç‰ˆç¤¾ï¼Œ2000年。
- ↑ Wú ZhèngbiÄo and Yáng GuÄngyÄ«ng, 2010. 兼谈苗æ—英雄å²è¯—《亚é²çŽ‹ã€‹çš„记译整ç†é—®é¢˜, æ°‘æ—翻译.
|
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, December 12, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.